Title: Cognitive Processes PSY 334
1Cognitive ProcessesPSY 334
- Chapter 1 The Science of Cognition
2Study Aids
- On the course web page
- Copies of these Powerpoint slides.
- Textbook publisher student website
- http//bcs.worthpublishers.com/anderson7e/
- See pg 5, Chapter 1 How to study effectively
(PQ4R Method). - Pay special attention to the summary statements
highlighted between lines in the textbook.
3Early History
- Empiricism vs nativism (nurture vs nature)
- Famous empiricists (nurture)
- Berkeley, Locke, Hume, Mill
- Famous nativists (nature)
- Descartes, Kant
- Lots of philosophical speculation but no use of
the scientific method to answer questions.
4Lockes Essay Concerning Human Understanding
- This work was the beginning of British
Empiricism. - Locke sought a set of laws for the human mind,
like Newtons principles of physics. - Lockes system is atomistic and reductionistic.
- Basic elements of mind are ideas.
- Ideas come from experience (Locke rejected
Descartes). - The blank slate, page of paper, tablet comes
from Aristotle, but characterized empiricism. - Ideas have two sources sensation reflection.
5Locke Ideas (Cont.)
- Sensations can be illusory or misleading.
- Ideas are either simple or complex. Simples ideas
form a complex idea in several ways - By combining several simple ideas into a single
one. - By seeing the relation between two simple ideas.
- By separating simple ideas from other ideas that
go with them the process of abstraction. - Lockes idea about combination of ideas is
analogous to a chemical compound (from Boyle).
6George Berkeley (1685-1753)
- Wrote three essays that radically extended
Lockes philosophy into subject idealism
(immaterialism). - Berkeley argued that because all knowledge of the
world comes from experience, the very existence
of the external world depends on perception. - Matter exists because it is perceived matter
does not exist without a mind. - The permanence of the world is thus proof of
Gods existence. - His book on vision was better regarded in his
time.
7David Hume (1711-1776)
- Hume studied pneumatic philosophy (the name for
the science of mental life). - People are part of nature so should be studied
using the methods of studying nature. - He differentiated between impressions ideas
- When impressions ideas occur together they
become associated with each other. - 3 kinds of associations resemblance,
- contiguity in time or space, cause-and-effect
relationship.
8Rene Descartes
9Ideas about the Ideas Passions
- Two major classes of ideas exist in the mind
- Innate ideas inborn, time, space, motion, God.
- Derived ideas arising from experience, based on
memories of past events (open pores stay open). - Passions arise from the body and cause actions.
- 6 primary passions (wonder, love, hate, desire,
joy, sadness) other passions are mixtures of
these. - Animals do not possess minds so cannot think, be
self-aware or have language have no feelings.
10Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)
- The leading German epistemologist, Kant was a
subjectivist, nativist, rationalist successor to
Descartes and Leibniz. - Kant wrote A Critique of Pure Reason saying
that empiricists forgot to ask how experience is
possible. - Certain intuitions or categories of understanding
are inborn and frame our experiences. - This knowledge is a priori, whereas experiential
knowledge is a posteriori (known afterward). - 3 categories of mind cognition, affection,
conation.
11Kants View of A Priori Knowledge
- Concepts of space and time.
- Other intuitions, including cause and effect,
reciprocity, reality, existence and necessity. - Higher faculties of reasoning are understanding,
judgment, reason. - True science must begin with concepts established
a priori by reason alone and deal with observable
objects that can be located in time and space. - Psychology lacks this so it cannot be a science.
12Scientific Psychology
- Scientific study began in 1879
- Structuralism Wundt, Titchener and systematic,
analytic introspection. - Functionalism -- William James armchair
introspection. - Behaviorism (1920)
- Thorndike consciousness as excess baggage.
- Watson consciousness as superstition.
13Early Mentalists
- Gestalt psychologists (German)
- Wertheimer, Koffka, Kohler
- Critics of behaviorism
- Tolman
- European psychologists
- Bartlett early memory researcher
- Luria
- Piaget
14Mind for Behaviorists
Input Sensation
Output Behavior
What laws describe the relationship between input
and output?
15Mind for Cognitive Theorists
Mental Representations Goals, Expectations,
Cognitive Maps Processes
Input Sensation
Output Behavior
What happens inside the box to produce the
observed behavior?
16Three Important Influences
- Human performance studies in WWII information
needed to train military. - Artificial intelligence thinking about how
machines accomplish things leads to more
analytical thinking about how humans do. - Linguistics behaviorist principles could not
account for the complexities of language use.
17Pioneers of Cognitive Psychology
- Information theory
- Donald Broadbent
- Artificial Intelligence
- Newell Simon
- Linguistics
- Chomsky new ways of analyzing language
- Miller -- psycholinguistics
- Neissers book Cognitive Psychology
18Cognitive Science
- Cognitive psychology -- human thinking.
- Cognitive science studies both human and machine
thinking (artificial intelligence). - Cognitive science includes philosophy and
neuroscience as well as psychology. - Non-human (artificial) intelligence
- http//alice.pandorabots.com/
- http//www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/asaygin/tt/ttest.htm
ltalktothem
19Information Processing
- The dominant paradigm (approach) today in
cognitive psychology. - A computer metaphor is used to conceptualize
mental activity - Mental processes operate upon mental
representations - Ops on Reps
- Flowcharted steps
20A Functional Approach
- Mental activity is described in functional terms.
- Brain location, brain processes and neural
representation are ignored.
21How are Models Tested?
- Because no direct observation of mental processes
is possible, behavior is studied. - Measurement of response time is used to deduce
the steps performed.
22Sternbergs Paradigm
- 3 9 7
- Was 9 a part of this number?
- 9 would be a positive probe (target)
- 6 would be a negative probe (foil)
23Sternbergs Flowchart (Model)
24Possibilities
- People look at the numbers one at a time in
sequence, stopping when they get the answer. - People look at the numbers one at a time in
sequence but continue until the end before giving
a response. - People look at all three of the numbers at once,
responding when they recognize the target number
in the set.
25What do people do?
26If people looked at a set as a single object, the
data would be different.
Foil and target times would be different if
people stopped searching when they found the
correct answer.
27Concerns about Cognitive Models
- Relevance do lab-task processes operate in the
same manner in real life? - Sufficiency can simple theories explain complex
processes? - Cognitive architectures, computer models
- Necessity does the mind actually work as
described by specific theories? - Cognitive neuroscience
28Cognitive Neuroscience
- Pages 12-30 review basic concepts about the
brain. - If you have not taken PSY 210 and find this
material confusing, come see me. - New methods permit study of normal human
functioning in more complex tasks - EEG
- Imaging techniques PET fMRI
29Review brain regions and localization of function
in the brain.
30Parts of Neuron
31Kinds of Neurons
32Action Potential Demo
- http//outreach.mcb.harvard.edu/animations/actionp
otential.swf
33EEG measures patterns of brain activity.
34Functional MRI (fMRI)
An fMRI scan showing regions of activation in
orange, including the primary visual cortex (V1,
BA17).
35Autism Affects Semantic Processing of Abstract
Words
36Using FMRI to Confirm a Model
- BOLD Blood Oxygen Level Dependent response
- Measured in 3 different areas of brain motor,
parietal region, prefrontal region. - Measured and plotted every 1.2 sec.
- Peaks in BOLD graph show when an area of the
brain was active (4-5 sec delay). - Different components to a task can be
independently tracked.
37The Task
Step 0
Step 1
Step 2
38Measured in Three Areas
Motor
Prefrontal
Parietal
Notice that the peaks of activity for each step
occur in the same order as the steps do when
solving the problem.
39Other Approaches to Cognitive Psychology
- Connectionism (neural net models) can higher
level functions be accomplished by connected
neurons? - Parallel distributed processing (PDP) --
Rumelhart McClelland - Situated cognition the ecological approach
- Gibsons affordances
- Do we explain cognition in terms of the external
world or internal mind?